See Also: REGRET
The author expanded upon the simile as follows: “But you may cover it over so that no truth can fall upon it, or you may let false light gleam upon it and then it will lead you astray.”
The word ‘hath’ from the original simile has been modernized to ‘has.’
Conscious is an adjective. If you are conscious of something, you are aware of it.
If you are conscious, you are awake, rather than asleep or unconscious.
Consciousness is a noun. You can refer to your mind and thoughts as your consciousness.
If you lose consciousness, you become unconscious. If you regain consciousness or recover consciousness, you become conscious again after being unconscious. These are fairly formal expressions.
In more informal English you can say that you pass out instead of 'lose consciousness', and come round instead of 'regain/recover consciousness'.
Conscience is a noun. Your conscience is the part of your mind that tells you whether what you are doing is right or wrong.
Conscientious is an adjective. Someone who is conscientious is very careful to do their work properly.
| Noun | 1. | conscience - motivation deriving logically from ethical or moral principles that govern a person's thoughts and actionssuperego - (psychoanalysis) that part of the unconscious mind that acts as a conscience sense of duty, sense of shame - a motivating awareness of ethical responsibility |
| 2. | conscience - conformity to one's own sense of right conduct; "a person of unflagging conscience" morality - concern with the distinction between good and evil or right and wrong; right or good conduct conscientiousness - the quality of being in accord with the dictates of conscience unconscientiousness - the quality of being willing to ignore the dictates of conscience | |
| 3. | conscience - a feeling of shame when you do something immoral; "he has no conscience about his cruelty" shame - a painful emotion resulting from an awareness of inadequacy or guilt |